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Bell_Beaker_artefacts,_Sardinia.png (421 × 286 pixels, file size: 215 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
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Graves with Beaker artefacts have been discovered in the Brescia area, like that of Ca' di Marco , while in central Italy, bell-shaped glasses were found in the tomb of Fosso Conicchio . [209] [full citation needed] The Bell Beaker culture was followed by the Polada culture and Proto-Apennine culture.
Bell_Beaker_pottery_from_Monte_d'Accoddi,_Sardinia.png (694 × 379 pixels, file size: 153 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Beaker (laboratory equipment) ... Ground glass; Ground glass joint; H. Hydrometer; ... Soxhlet Extractor.png 128 × 688; 32 KB
The Reichsadler means "Imperial Eagle" or double-headed eagle which was the emblem of the empire, while "humpen" refers to a cylindrical drinking glass. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] These beakers became the essential medium to represent the most popular explanatory model for the emergence of the Empire: the quaternion theory as represented by Hans Burgkmair .
Hedwig glasses or Hedwig beakers are a type of glass beaker originating in the Middle East or Norman Sicily and dating from the 10th-12th centuries AD. They are named after the Silesian princess Saint Hedwig (1174–1245), to whom three of them are traditionally said to have belonged. [ 1 ]